Visa Bulletin and Family Green Card Delays — How to Read Priority Dates and Plan Next Steps
Key takeaway
A plain-English guide to the Visa Bulletin, priority dates, family preference green card delays, final action dates, filing dates, retrogression, and what families should save before acting.
A plain-English guide to the Visa Bulletin, priority dates, family preference green card delays, final action dates, filing dates, retrogression, and what families should save before acting.
Last reviewed: May 25, 2026The Takeaway
- The Visa Bulletin controls when many family preference green card cases can move forward, but the correct chart and category matter.
- Priority dates, country of chargeability, family category, final action dates, and filing dates should be checked before making plans.
- Save I-130 receipts, approvals, NVC notices, USCIS notices, and proof of priority date before assuming a case is ready.
What just happened
The Visa Bulletin can make a family green card case feel frozen, current, delayed, or suddenly urgent. It is a monthly Department of State publication that helps determine when certain immigrant visa applicants may move forward based on category, country, and priority date. Many families hear that a petition was approved and assume the green card is ready. Approval of a family petition is important, but it does not always mean a visa number is immediately available. The next step depends on the family category, the country charged to the case, and whether the priority date is current under the correct chart.
First thing to do — find the priority date
The priority date is usually the date the qualifying family petition was properly filed. It often appears on the I-130 receipt notice or approval notice. Write it down exactly. Then identify the family category, such as spouse or child of a permanent resident, unmarried adult child of a citizen, married child of a citizen, or sibling of a citizen. Immediate relatives of U.S. citizens are treated differently from family preference categories. If the category is wrong, the Visa Bulletin analysis will be wrong.
Final action dates vs. dates for filing
The Visa Bulletin usually includes final action dates and dates for filing. Final action dates generally relate to when a green card or immigrant visa may be finally approved if all other requirements are met. Dates for filing may allow certain applicants to submit documents earlier, depending on government instructions. For adjustment of status inside the United States, USCIS announces each month which chart can be used. Do not assume the same chart applies every month. Check the current USCIS adjustment chart guidance before filing.
Country of chargeability
The country column is usually based on the applicant’s country of birth, not citizenship, residence, or where the petitioner lives. Some countries have separate columns because demand is higher. This can create very different waiting times for the same family category. In some cases, cross-chargeability may be relevant, but it depends on the facts and should be reviewed carefully. A wrong country assumption can lead a family to think a case is current when it is not.
What to gather before acting
Gather the I-130 receipt notice, I-130 approval notice, NVC welcome letter if any, USCIS account screenshots, priority date, petitioner status, beneficiary country of birth, marriage or birth records, prior immigration filings, address history, and any notices from the National Visa Center, USCIS, or Department of State. If the case involves a child aging out, marriage, divorce, petitioner naturalization, death of a petitioner, or prior denial, gather those documents too. These facts can change the category or strategy.
Retrogression and why dates can move backward
Visa Bulletin dates do not only move forward. They can pause, move slowly, or retrogress. Retrogression means a date that was current may no longer be current because visa demand exceeded availability. This can be extremely frustrating for families who thought the case was ready. If a case retrogresses, keep documents updated, preserve notices, and avoid making travel, job, or housing decisions based on assumptions. The timing may change again in a future bulletin.
Common mistakes families make
Families often confuse petition approval with visa availability, use the wrong family category, ignore the country column, rely on an old bulletin, use the wrong chart, forget to check USCIS monthly guidance, or fail to save NVC and USCIS notices. Some families also delay civil documents, police certificates, affidavits of support, or financial evidence until the last moment. A case may become current before the paperwork is ready, creating avoidable delay.
What not to do
Do not quit a job, sell property, book permanent travel, or assume approval based only on a petition approval notice. Do not file adjustment of status unless the correct chart and category allow it and all eligibility issues have been reviewed. Do not ignore prior unlawful presence, entries, visa overstays, criminal history, prior removals, or fraud concerns. Visa availability is only one part of the case. Eligibility still matters.
What happens next
If the priority date is not current, the case may remain in a waiting stage while the family preserves documents and monitors the monthly bulletin. If the date becomes current, the next step may involve adjustment of status, NVC document submission, consular processing, affidavit of support, medical exam, interview preparation, or response to a government notice. The right path depends on where the beneficiary is located, immigration history, family category, and whether any inadmissibility issues exist.
What to do next
- Save the full notice, receipt, envelope, and any deadline exactly as written.
- Write a short timeline with dates, agency names, court or facility names, and prior filings.
- If ICE, court, detention, an RFE, NOID, denial, or a close deadline is involved, start intake and mark the issue urgent.
Common questions
Use these dropdowns to prepare for real issues and identify facts that may need attorney review.
What is a priority date?
It is usually the filing date of the qualifying family petition. It appears on receipt or approval notices and is used with the Visa Bulletin to determine when some cases can move forward.
Does I-130 approval mean the green card is approved?
No. I-130 approval confirms the qualifying relationship, but family preference cases may still wait for visa availability and must still satisfy all other requirements.
Which Visa Bulletin chart should I use?
For consular processing, Department of State instructions matter. For adjustment of status, USCIS announces each month whether applicants may use final action dates or dates for filing.
Can dates move backward?
Yes. That is called retrogression. A date can become unavailable again when demand exceeds visa availability.
Does country mean citizenship?
Usually no. Chargeability is commonly based on country of birth, though special rules may apply in some situations.
What if the petitioner becomes a U.S. citizen?
Naturalization can change the family category in some cases. Save the naturalization certificate and get the category reviewed before assuming the timeline.
What should intake include?
Include the priority date, family category, country of birth, receipt number, approval notice, NVC case number if any, current location, and any USCIS or NVC deadline.
Official sources used for this guide
Government pages can change. This article was last reviewed on May 25, 2026. When an official page displays its own updated date, use the government page as the controlling source.
- Department of State Visa Bulletin — travel.state.gov
- USCIS Adjustment of Status Filing Charts — uscis.gov/visabulletininfo
- USCIS Form I-130 — uscis.gov/i-130
- National Visa Center — travel.state.gov
- USCIS Case Status Online — egov.uscis.gov
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📋 Official government resources
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